Dick Tracy - Dell 4 Color Comics 96
Lots of panels (averaging 11+ per page) make for nice-sized stories in this 52-page book. Of course, Gould's art is "cartoony" and very stylised, but I'm used to that.
Yogee Yamma & The Underground Prisoner
Unfortunately, the first story in this book starts in its middle, and CB+ doesn't seem to have a book with the first 2/3 of this story. The previous Dell 4 Color Dick Tracy book (#56) ends with a different story. The story about a chemist being captured by a villain, and forced to work on developing his nerve gas that temporarily keeps people unable to resist commands from others, so the villain can sell it to enemy nations for fantastic amounts of money, is very interesting and entertaining.
Black Pearl & The Flying Submarine/Tank
This story is typical of wartime stories about weapons plans stolen by foreign agents, who sell them to the highest-bidding heads of foreign military organisations (almost always enemies of the comic publishing nation. And the theme of a new, secret armoured combat machined vehicle, that flies in the air like an airplane, rides on the surface of water like a boat, navigates under water like a submarine, and moves quickly over land like a highly-mobile, heavily-armed tank. It's an interesting concept, having the protagonists (plainclothed detectives) kidnapped by the villainess, to be used as "testers" of an experimental vehicle in life-threatening situations, so that lives of her gang members aren't put at risk. I do think that the ending is a bit weak and disappointing, having the foreign potential buyer be a US secret service agent in disguise, and capturing the main gang members all at once, just by pulling out his gun and pointing it at The Boss (Black Pearl). And the main hero, Dick Tracy, just finding them already captured. Not much action at the optimum (should-be) climax point. The author using the novel idea of having Tracy take the submarine back deep under the water and pound on a mostly underground water main to send a morse code SOS message to the pumping station to send police to his rescue is an unexpected clever addition to the story.
Junior Tracy & The Great Bicycle Racket
This is a very entertaining story with a very inventive plot. The only slight problem is that it is difficult to believe that a criminal gang with such a well-organised plan for building a business, would set up a young boy in a business, to sell stolen items, on a plot of land that was owned by someone else, with both of those situations bound to be found out by the city's authorities, ESPECIALLY because a young minor operating a business (without a license - which he likely couldn't receive in any case), would attract a LOT of attention. A related problem is the fact that the amount money the crooks would be garnering was way too small in relation to the amount of physical work they needed to do (fixing bicycles and assembling new bikes using the stolen parts), and the high risk of getting caught. Doing the work they were doing, they'd have been much better off to "go straight", and open a legitimate bicycle sales and repair shop. And it also seemed like a bad idea to smash a lot of students' bicycles one time only, and need to move their mobile operations to a new town after each child businessman recruiting and bicycle parking lot smashing event. They would be continually moving, and would need to spend more money on gasoline, flophouse rent, and eating all meals from restaurants and grocery stores, than they probably could earn from selling new bicycles from $3-5. They couldn't all sleep in their truck, as it would need to be filled with stolen bicycles and parts, as well as tools to assemble and fix them. The ironic thing about it is that the plot is just not well thought out. I would think there is a way to change the plot elements to get rid of the illogical and unrealistic elements, and still have the desired entertaining results of a criminal gang taking advantage of kids' entrapeneurial instincts, and also have bicycle stealing be the source of the revenue. I'm not sure if I'd end up using repairing the bikes as a remedy. Perhaps just having a different gang member, posing as a civic-minded, used bicycle dealer, providing the stolen "replacement bicycles" at a "fair" price to help the families of the kids whose bikes were stolen. The bicycles stolen in their previous town of operation could be sold in the next town, to avoid having the school children whose bikes were stolen, recognising bikes sold to them as belonging to their schoolmates. This just points out that even some newspaper strip stories weren't well thought out because of the severe time pressure to continue day-after-day, week-after-week to come up with the daily line strip or weekly Sunday page.
All in all, this was a very enjoyable read. I wish I could read the opening story from its beginning. I don't remember reading it during the early '50s. I did read some of the Dick Tracy stories in Sunday Newspapers during the 1950s and early 1960s. But this story was from 1940, and my cousins didn't save old newspaper comics sections.